| Question |
Answer |
| inerst |
unable to act or move
|
| circumvent |
to get around; to bypass |
| acquit |
to find not guilty of a fault or crime |
| clandestine |
secret
|
| deprecate |
to express strong disapproval of |
| barrister |
lawyer (British) |
| adulation |
excessive praise or admiration |
| culinary |
having to do with the kitchen or cooking |
| bawdy |
indecent; humorously obscene |
| chastise |
to punish severly |
| joscose |
joking; humorous |
| myraid |
a very large number;
too numerous to be counted |
| latent |
present, but not active; hidden |
| pernicious |
destructive; deadly |
| frugal |
thrifty; economical in money matters |
| levity |
lightness of deposition; lack of seriousness |
| hoax |
a practical joke; a trick |
| amicable |
friendly; peaceful |
| obstreperous |
aggressively boisterous; stubborn and defiant |
| enraptured |
delighted beyond measure |
| martial |
having to do with marraige |
| bask |
to expose oneself to pleasant warmth |
| genial |
friendly; amiable |
| charlatan |
one who pretends to have knowledge in order to swindle others
|
| mundane |
commonplace; earthly and not spiritual |
| fickle |
likely to change on a whim or without apparent reason |
| juggernaut |
a terrible destructive or irresistible force. |
| naive |
unsophisticated |
| nocturnal |
having to do with night; occurring at night |
| novice |
a beginner; one who is inexperienced |